Storm Combo seems to have evolved from a joke to a playable archetype in this iteration of the Magic Online Cube, which I'm very happy about. In this video article, I'll go through a draft where I ended up in Boros Aggro, like I did in my last draft walkthrough video. This time it'll be a little different since the deck has a splash.

Unfortunately, some unfamiliarity with the Magic Online Beta client and good old-fashioned auto piloting caused me to embarrassingly include a Forest in the decklist instead of a plains due to Kitchen Finks; I definitely should have caught that mistake. I also went through a short mental exercise in which I took out the aggressive cards to see if the deck could work as a Wildfire deck (it couldn't,) so don't think that I lost my mind by cutting the core of the deck.

I justified running "the Becker" (41 cards) because the deck felt like it was skirting the edge on creatures (thirteen, fourteen counting Koth) and lands (seventeen counting Mox Ruby and Pearl as lands but not counting Mox Sapphire with a Boros Garrison), but I likely could have gone to sixteen lands. I highly considered playing Disenchant as I typically do main, but it didn't feel like the deck could afford the space because I couldn't cut a creature and the noncreatures felt more important than Disenchant.

Sideboard

Round 1, Game 1

Round 1, Game 2

Round 2, Game 1

As mentioned in the video, I punted by playing a Plains instead of a Mountain to enable Koth. It's worth noting that with an active Cursed Scroll, the opponent likely wouldn't have blocked the Mountain as I had a hasty 4/4 attacking. I assume that the opponent wouldn't have blocked due to my having an active Cursed Scroll (or near active). The opponent may have Plowed my Savannah Lions earlier due to not having that life cushion, and the Mirran Crusader likely would have gone the distance.

Round 2, Game 2

Round 2, Game 3

Round 3, Game 1

Round 3, Game 2

It feels a bit odd saying that I feel that beatdown is still the underdog in the Magic Online Cube since I've consecutively won with Boros Aggro decks in my recorded drafts. However, I still feel that it is the case. Either way, I hope that you enjoyed this draft walkthrough. I've heard people downplay how useful power is for aggro decks, so I hope that these videos—particularly round 3, game 2—showed just how nutty it can be in aggro decks.

May all of your opening packs of the 2012 Magic Online Holiday Cube contain Sol Rings!

About Usman Jamil

Usman Jamil has been playing Magic since Revised and Fallen Empires. Usman spends most of his Magic time thinking about, writing about, podcasting about, tinkering with and playing Cube, theorizing about its various aspects and going on his soapbox.